User:Visviva/NYT 20090207

This is a list of lowercase non-hyphenated single words, lacking English entries in the English Wiktionary as of the most recent database dump, found in the 2009-02-07 issue of the New York Times (2009-02-07).

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Please create these entries if you are able. Feel free to maintain and annotate the list as well. Typos and non-English words can be removed, or sequestered at the bottom of the list if annotation is needed.

The quotes often provide good usage examples and attestation evidence and, in many cases, should be included in the entry or citation page for the lemma.

Clicking an "add" link should preload the edit form with a dummy entry including a formatted citation for the passage in question. In some cases a "notemp" link is also provided; this generates a template-free version.

False blue links (entries that exist but lack a section for the appropriate language) are marked with a "*".

“The sweep of the losses, the extent of them and the speed are depressionlike, and by that I mean like the 1930s,” said Allen Sinai, chief economist at Decision Economics, an economic forecasting firm in Lexington, Mass.

We don’t even get to find out what she thought about No Child Left Behind before her docile vice president has taken over, and her brother, a Republican governor, has mounted an electoral bid against him, guaranteeing an America safe from the now-rampant subway gassings and tunnel bombs.

Morgan Tsvangirai , the leader of the Movement for Democratic Change, is to become prime minister next week in a government in which Mr. Mugabe will remain president, an awkward pairing of deeply mistrustful rivals. Mr. Tsvangirai outpolled Mr. Mugabe, who has been in power since 1980, in elections last March, but withdrew from a discredited runoff after thousands of his supporters were attacked by state security agents.